D
DJim
Guest
Ralph wrote:
I commented:
”Yet, I thought oral tradition was as unreliable and fallible as was the Magisterium???”
Ralph replied:
WHO gets to decide when tradition and magisterium are either right or wrong??? Whoever decides that therefore must be the infallible authority, correct?
I asked:
“How do we know the oral tradtion of the early church properly identified Scripture?”
Ralph said:
Historically, how did the Canon emerge in the Early Church? You’ve stated already that it emerged from fallible “oral tradition”. If fallible oral tradition is the mechanism by which “consistency” was measured to determine the Canon, then that measurement was fallible, not infallible, right??
And, what do you think of Mk 15:28–Scriptural or not? I’m taking an informal poll…
DJim
Can you compare and contrast the two–or define them so I know which one you think is correct?Yes! That should only shock those who confuse Sola Scriptura with Solo Scriptura.
I commented:
”Yet, I thought oral tradition was as unreliable and fallible as was the Magisterium???”
Ralph replied:
Time out, Ralph–step back for a moment with me and observe what you just wrote. You are claiming that both “tradition” and “magisterium” are fallible according to some external standard of “right” or “wrong”…Which begs the question:And they are as we have been warned they would be. When they are right they are right when they are wrong they are wrong.
WHO gets to decide when tradition and magisterium are either right or wrong??? Whoever decides that therefore must be the infallible authority, correct?
I asked:
“How do we know the oral tradtion of the early church properly identified Scripture?”
Ralph said:
Which also begs the question: WHO officially decided 2000 years ago what it means to be “consistent”??? Thomas is an obvious “no” for the Canon, at least to you and me, but who was it, officially and on behalf of all Christians, who decided “No Thomas in the NT”?? And what about books/letters that really are consistent with Scripture but aren’t in the Canon–the Didache, the Letter of Barnabas, the Shepherd of Hermas??? Who axed those?This is the next logical question. The answer is, we know the same way they new. To make a long explanation short, they are consistent; we can see that all of the books and letters of the New Testament are consistent with each other. They, as we, reject for example the so called Gospel of Thomas because it is not consistent with the other books and letters of the New Testament.
Historically, how did the Canon emerge in the Early Church? You’ve stated already that it emerged from fallible “oral tradition”. If fallible oral tradition is the mechanism by which “consistency” was measured to determine the Canon, then that measurement was fallible, not infallible, right??
And, what do you think of Mk 15:28–Scriptural or not? I’m taking an informal poll…
DJim